Finereader Abbyy Extra Quality [TESTED]
A grimy 1950s carbon copy form presents a massive problem for standard software. The background noise (yellowed paper, coffee stains, ink bleed) confuses the letter shapes.
To understand the premium, consider three measurable outcomes: finereader abbyy extra quality
Do not scan at 300 DPI if you need Extra Quality. For small fonts (8pt or less), scan at 600 DPI. The extra quality algorithm has more pixels to analyze, which reduces AI guesswork. A grimy 1950s carbon copy form presents a
In the world of document conversion, Optical Character Recognition (OCR) is no longer a novelty. What separates professional tools from casual apps is accuracy. When a misplaced comma changes a financial figure, or a smudged ‘rn’ reads as an ‘m’, "good enough" OCR fails. Numeric/table recovery
This is where ABBYY FineReader steps in with its secret weapon: Extra Quality mode.
While Extra Quality is powerful, it is computationally expensive. Knowing when to flick the switch saves time and CPU power.
Standard OCR treats a scan as a flat 2D image. But a physical book has a spine. When you scan a thick book, the text near the binding curves inward, creating a shadow and distorted letters.